FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to improved methods and simplified apparatus for heat
treatment to harden aluminum castings, more particularly, castings made from heat-treatable
aluminum alloys, preferably such as the copper-containing 300 series, including for
example those used to cast aluminum parts of the type utilized in the manufacture
of automobile and aviation internal combustion engines: cylinder heads, engine blocks
and the like; whereby according to this invention the castings are directly quenched
immediately after demolding to obtain superior aluminum castings without undergoing
the conventional step of "solution" heat treatment (previously thought necessary to
produce castings of such quality), thereby eliminating expensive equipment and related
energy and production time.
[0002] In its broader aspects, this invention is applicable to any aluminum alloy system
having significant precipitation hardening with meaningful benefit from "solution"
heat treating. Where solution heating has proven to be useful, the prior art teaches
this step to be a requisite in the casting finishing process to achieve proper hardening.
These would include aluminum alloys with magnesium combined with copper, or zinc,
or all three, or silicon). These aluminum alloys are termed "heat-treatable" alloys
to distinguish them from those alloys for which the solution heating gives no significant
strengthening. Only for such non-heat-treatable alloys does the prior art recognize
precipitation heat treating without prior solution heat treatment (these latter would
include thin extrusion alloys 6061, 6063, 6463 and 7005; which notably are not casting
alloys).
[0003] The invention provides a process which considerably simplifies the manufacturing
of such castings and decreases the capital and operational costs thereof. The inventive
process for simplified heat treating of castings unexpectedly also has the additional
benefit of avoiding silicon spheroidization and keeps a modified structure in the
alloy resulting in improved machining properties, due to elimination of the conventional
solution heat treating of said castings.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0004] Metal castings are heat treated to produce a change in mechanical properties by changing
the type and proportion of phases present in the solid state, the morphology of the
microconstituents, and the concentration and distribution of crystal defects.
[0005] The description will be mainly in terms of copper-containing aluminum alloys, but
should be understood to be more broadly applicable, where effective (e.g. some precipitation
hardening systems derive strength from Mg
2Si or MgZn
2 instead of CuA1
2).
[0006] Such aluminum alloys (which may contain, for example, generally on the order of up
to 5% copper) are currently heat treated for the purpose of improving their mechanical
properties by precipitation hardening involving a solution and aging treatment sequence.
[0007] Hardening and development of other properties of aluminum-copper alloys require control
of the casting and associated heat-treating processes under such conditions so as
to maintain in solid solution the copper within the aluminum matrix. Following the
casting mold removal, the casting typically is naturally cooled well below 470
oC (often to ambient temperature) prior to the next solution heat treating step (which
latter step has the purpose of re-incorporating the copper atoms into the aluminum
molecular matrix, to avoid uncontrolled and excessive precipitation of copper as CuAl
2; because copper, fully dissolved in the liquid aluminum, naturally tends to precipitate
from the aluminum as the temperature decreases from about 500°C to ambient temperature).
[0008] In order to maintain the copper dissolved in the proper amount and in the required
form in the alloy to obtain a predetermined level of hardness and strength, such heat-treatable
aluminum castings are universally subjected to this traditional solution heat treatment
at temperatures above 470
oC (typically in the range between 480°C and 495°C) for a certain period of time, usually
in the range between at least 2 to 7 hours. The expressed object of this heat treating
step is to obtain a homogeneous distribution of fine copper precipitates in the alloy.
This solution heat treating, however, incidentally adversely promotes the spheroidization
of silicon and consequently somewhat degrades the machining properties of the resulting
castings (a condition which the industry for most purposes has learned to accept).
[0009] The next manufacturing step is rapidly to quench said castings, without interruption,
from the solution heat treatment temperature, e.g. about 480°C, down to a temperature
around 85°C, thus maintaining the copper precipitates in the adequate amount and homogeneous
distribution in solid solution. Quench cooling may commonly carried down to any of
a number of different temperatures and at different rates according to the final properties
of the alloy to be emphasized (see "Quenching" discussed in the ASM Handbook, Volume
4 (1991),
infra at page 851 et seq. which discloses use of cold water, for near ambient temperatures;
boiling water, for 100
oC; polyalkaline glycol, for even higher temperatures; forced air or mist; etc.).
[0010] This quenching step produces a supersaturated solid solution that causes the alloy
to harden naturally as time passes. Finally, in order to accelerate and improve hardening,
the castings are maintained at temperatures of about 200 °C in an "aging" furnace.
The time spent in the "aging" furnace brings the alloy to at least a partial coherency
in its structure giving it the required hardness and strength properties.
[0011] For more information on the details of the prior art methods, reference is made to
the ASM Handbook, Volume 2 (1990), entitled "Properties and Selection: Nonferrous
Alloys and Special Purpose Materials"; and Volume 4 (1991), entitled "Heat Treating"
(especially pages 824-879); both being tenth editions, published by ASM International;
the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. See page 833 which speaks
of "the
required solution heat treatment", page 844 which in discussing "Solution Heat Treating" states
that "to take advantage of the precipitation-hardening reaction, it is necessary first
to produce a solid solution. The process by which this is accomplished is called solution
heat treating," and page 851 where the only indicated exception is discussed in "Precipitation
Heat without Prior Solution Heat Treatment", there stating that certain thin extrusion
alloys after having been "air cooled or water quenched
directly from a final hot-working operation", "develop strengths nearly equal to those obtained
by adding a separate solution heat treating operation" [emphases added].
[0012] The present invention is based on the applicants' finding that by
directly quenching the heat-treatable aluminum casting after demolding, contrary to the current
practice of heat treating previously cooled aluminum castings in a solution furnace,
the essentially same properties of hardness and strength can be obtained. Some properties
may improve and others slightly decrease, but usually not more so than would occur
in variations resulting from adjustments in the heat solution treatment made to emphasize
one property trait over another (in the usual compromises made in such treatments
to achieve the best balance of desirable properties). Even where there may be some
decrease, this has been found to be within the usual tolerance levels normally required
for the final product.
[0013] This invention thus results in multimillion dollar savings in capital investment
and upkeep costs of the solution heating treatment furnace and the operational energy
costs of such treatment. The casting plants are therefore greatly simplified. This
new and simplified heat treating process thus constitutes a significant breakthrough
in the art of heat-treatment aluminum alloy casting.
[0014] As an example of the heat treating step of the prior art, which is avoided by the
present invention, reference is made to U.S. patent No. 5,294,094 to Crafton et al.
In Fig. 1 of this patent the "solution furnace" is designated by the numeral 11 and
as described therein. It comprises a number of zones and is the largest piece of equipment
of the plant, involving high capital costs. This patent is addressed to the improvement
of such heat treating furnace by performing the sand core removal therein, consequently
it does not suggest the elimination of such furnace as the present invention does.
[0015] The present invention provides a process which eliminates the traditional "solution
furnaces" and produces aluminum alloy castings with similar properties of hardness
and strength as those of the prior art. Another advantage of the invention is that
silicon spheroidization is avoided improving the machining properties of castings.
The effect is that the castings produced according to the invention improve to class
A from class B in the classification for aluminum alloys. Aluminum alloys are classified
from A to E in increasing order of chip length and decreasing order of quality of
finish. Class A is characterized as free cutting, very small broken chips and excellent
finish; class B is characterized as curled or easily broken chips and good to excellent
finish.
[0016] The silicon morphology in the castings is responsible for the machining properties.
Silicon takes the form of plates in the naturally solidified alloy, but when the alloy
is heated to the solution temperature, after it has been cooled down, then silicon
changes to spheroid form which produces continuous curled chips. If the alloy is quenched
and aged in accordance with the invention without the solution heating step, the silicon
keeps the fibrous structure which advantageously produces short chips.
[0017] The time involved in heat-treating for solution of copper has been decreased in a
factor of about 4 from the traditional 8-12 hours, e.g. to 2-3 hours according to
M.H. Lavington,
The Cosworth Process-a new concept in aluminum alloy casting production, Metals and Materials, Volume 2, No. 11, November 1986, but the solution treatment
has not been eliminated. The applicants are not aware of any proposal from aluminum
casting technology suppliers, or of any plant currently operating, which have either
suggested or practiced a heat treatment process as in the present invention, i.e.
without subjecting said castings to the solution heat treating furnace and instead,
contrary to prior art expertise to directly quench the castings to near ambient temperature
immediately after demolding, or at least after maintaining the temperature of such
casting above 400°C (in other words, without letting said temperature to fall below
400°C).
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION.
[0018] It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a process of manufacturing
aluminum alloy castings with improved properties and at lower capital and operational
costs.
[0019] Other objects of the invention will be in part obvious and in part pointed out hereinafter.
[0020] According to the present invention the objects thereof are achieved by providing
a method of producing hardened aluminum alloy castings, comprising
directly quenching newly formed still-hot heat-treatable aluminum alloy metal, then age hardening
(without solution heat treatment). This typically involves the steps of filling a
mold with liquid heat-treatable aluminum alloy, cooling sufficiently to form a solidified
casting, extracting said casting from said mold at a temperature preferably in the
range between 490°C and 500°C, optionally maintaining the surface temperature of said
casting in the range between 490
oC and 400°C and at a temperature lower than and/or a time less than for a solution
heat treatment thereof (such as less than 470
oC and/or from zero to two hours), then immediately quenching said casting, preferably
with water, to a temperature generally in the range between 65°C and 90°C, and without
any heat treating step between said mold extraction and said quenching, and aging
said casting, preferably in an aging furnace at a temperature between 140°C and 250°C
for a period of time from two to five hours. As used in this specification, "age hardening"
broadly includes not only natural aging at ambient temperatures, but also accelerated
aging in an aging furnace (which latter is sometimes distinguishingly referred to
as precipitation hardening).
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS.
[0021] In this specification and in the accompanying drawings, some preferred embodiments
of the invention are shown and described and various alternatives and modifications
thereof have been suggested; but it is to be understood that these changes and modifications
can be made within the scope of the invention. The suggestions herein are selected
and included for purposes of illustration in order that others skilled in the art
will more fully understand the invention and the principles thereof and will thus
be enabled to modify it in a variety of forms, each as may be best suited to the conditions
of a particular use.
Figure 1 is a flow diagram showing the process step sequence of the conventional prior
art method for producing aluminum castings;
Figure 2 is a flow diagram showing the process step sequence of the inventive method
for producing hardened aluminum castings from a heat-treatable alloy; and
Figure 3 is a graph showing the different temperature paths followed over time by
the heat treatment of the prior art and the heat treatment of the invention (in superimposed
plots of temperature of the casting according to both methods vs. time).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
[0022] With reference to Figure 1, the conventional method of casting aluminum parts, for
example hollow aluminum castings such as cylinder heads, engine blocks and the like,
comprises the following steps: 1) casting liquid aluminum into a suitable mold, usually
made of cast iron and having sand cores to form the interior surfaces of the casting;
2) after the aluminum alloy has solidified, removing the castings from the mold at
a temperature between 490°C to 500°C; 3) normally, allowing castings to cool naturally
(usually to ambient temperature) and eventually removing the sand cores (which removal
may be carried out after cooling of the castings or during the next heat treating
step); 4) heat treating the castings in a tunnel furnace, known as solution furnace,
to heat the castings to a predetermined temperature above 470
oC for a given time (normally being at least two hours for a casting of any bulk).
As is well known in the art, the time can be shortened by treating at a higher non-melting
temperature, but usually at some sacrifice of overall desirable properties (for some
cost saving, where such properties are not so critical in the end use). This heat
treatment is intended to avoid (if not cooled) or to revert the uncontrolled precipitation
of large particles of CuAl
2 occurring naturally when the alloy is slowly cooled down (e.g. naturally cooling
by exposure to ambient conditions); 5) quenching of the solution heat treated castings,
usually with liquid water at a temperature between 65° and 95°C, which rapid temperature
drop produces a supersaturated solution of copper in the aluminum alloy at the atomic
level; 6) aging the castings, which can be natural or preferably in a suitable furnace
in order to provide a predetermined rate of cooling of such castings for several hours
at a temperature on the order of 200
oC. This artificial aging in an aging furnace provides the desired properties of the
castings by combining the aging temperature and the time during which the castings
are subjected to said temperature. The dissolved copper at atomic level precipitates
as CuAl
2 but forms small submicroscopic particles in the alloy; and 7) finishing the castings
comprising for example: riser cutting, cubing, decoring, machining, deburring, cleaning,
etc.as required for delivering the final product.
[0023] The present invention provides a simplified method of producing heat-hardened aluminum
alloys castings with significant savings in capital and operational costs illustrated
in figure 2 for comparison with the process of the prior art, which method comprises
1) introducing liquid heat-treatable aluminum alloy, of a desired composition comprising
copper, into a mold to produce a casting; 2) removing from said mold the casting after
it has been cooled sufficiently to become solid; 3) quenching said casting, without
subjecting it to the solution heat treating of the prior art, while the alloy still
has a surface temperature above 350°C, i.e. not permitting said temperature to fall
below 350°C before initiating the quench in order to avoid the formation of large
precipitates of CuAl
2. This quenching is carried out with liquid water at a temperature between 65
oC and 95°C in the same manner as in the prior art; 4) aging said casting, for a period
normally less than needed for the prior art (though here shown in the range of 2 to
5 hours) at a temperature between 140
oC and 250°C; 5) removing the sand cores. This step can conveniently be carried out
after the aging treatment, because the alloy can now be cooled down without interfering
with the hardening process; and 6) finishing the castings, for example, riser cutting,
cubing, decoring, machining, etc., as required for delivering the final product.
[0024] It will be readily appreciated in view of this teaching by those skilled in the art
that eliminating the "solution" furnace while obtaining the same properties in the
products, considerably simplifies the aluminum casting process and lowers the production
costs thereof.
[0025] Referring now to figure 3, the advantages of the invention over the prior art can
be readily appreciated in a plot of temperature of the alloy casting vs time. The
prior art method is shown as a dotted line and the method of the preferred embodiment
of the invention is shown as a solid black line. As can be observed, the invention
shortens the manufacturing process of the aluminum alloys by a period of time in the
range of at least 2 to 7 hours, which is the time spent by the castings in the conventional
solution furnace. The properties of the castings however are within the range required
by a conventional heat treatment method, known as T6 by the American Aluminum Association,
as illustrated by the following example: Tests were made with an aluminum Alloy A-319
with the following conditions:
Test Conditions: |
Units |
Invention |
Prior Art |
Temperature at surface of casting before quenching |
(°C ) |
430 |
480 |
Aging time |
(hrs) |
2 |
4 |
Aging temperature |
(°C) |
240 |
240 |
Test Results (Property): |
|
|
|
Brinell Hardness |
( B ) |
109 |
100 |
Ultimate Tensile Stress |
(MPa) |
230 |
240 |
Elongation |
(%) |
1.4 |
1.8 |
Tensile Yield |
(MPa) |
207 |
205 |
Compression Yield |
(MPa) |
203 |
210 |
[0026] The lines shown in figure 3 are self-explanatory and are drawn of course only for
illustration purposes.
[0027] The simplification of the heat-treating process by eliminating the large solution
heat treating furnace is so advantageous that this invention is still a significant
improvement even in the case when a small furnace is used for holding the castings
after demolding (the only purpose thereof being to prevent the temperature of the
casting from falling down below 400°C, such as to accommodate delay in the processing
line or for short term maintenance). If the temperature of the castings falls down
below 400°C (without the direct precipitation quench step, contrary to the present
invention), then the precipitation of large particles of CuAl
2 occurs, and it then becomes mandatory to subject the castings to the normal solution
heat treating step in order to revert these precipitates to a solid solution of copper
in aluminum at the atomic level.
[0028] In order to explain the importance of the present invention in the aluminum casting
industry, it can be pointed out that a solution furnace, eliminated by the invention,
is a piece of equipment costing several millions of dollars. Its omission decreases
the capital costs of a casting plant by about 50%. Furthermore, the energy saved by
not operating such a furnace is a significant amount considering the cost of heating,
for example 800,000 pieces per year, each weighing about 30 Kg, plus the weight of
the casting holding basket, 20 to 30 Kg, from ambient temperature, i.e. 25°C to 35°C,
to the solution temperature of about 480°C and maintaining such temperature for several
hours.
[0029] Although the invention has been exemplified by the preferred embodiment of an Al-Cu
alloy system, it is of course to be understood that the foregoing description is intended
to be illustrative only and that numerous changes can be made in the structure of
the system described and its operating conditions without departing from the spirit
of the invention as defined in the appended claims. For example, the benefits are
applicable broadly to castings made from other disclosed aluminum alloy systems whose
phase diagrams would indicate slightly different critical temperatures from those
temperatures recited above for specific aluminum-copper systems. Also, although immediate
direct quench after demolding is usually preferred, simplified apparatus employing
a small furnace can be used for holding the castings after demolding (whose only purpose
is for preventing the temperature of the casting from falling below 400°C, when the
pieces have to spend a certain time waiting for the immediate quench, e.g. during
slow-downs, short term maintenance, etc.). As previously indicated, the invention
in its broader aspects can be applicable to other aluminum alloys and heat treating
processes wherein the solution furnace step is normally used but when the desired
properties can be obtained without such solution step (as can be readily determined
once in possession of this teaching).
[0030] Reverting to a consideration of the preferred embodiments having an Al-Cu alloy system,
this invention is particularly appropriate to aluminum alloys of the 300 series of
the AAA classification for cast aluminum (American Aluminum Association). A feature
of the preferred embodiments of this invention is that the properties of the castings
are within the range required of castings having a T6 temper (as defined by the American
Aluminum Association), but achieved without the solution heat treatment required of
castings that meet the T6 designation. Normally, aluminum alloys produced according
to the present invention have at least an 0.5 wt% copper content (and more preferably,
above a 1.6 wt% copper content), unless there is a significant amount of silicon (e.g.
above about 6.5 wt%). Among the typical 300 series compositions effective in this
process would be one within the following ranges:
Mg |
0.05 - 0.1 wt% |
Si |
5.5 - 6.5 |
Cu |
2.0 - 4.0 |
Fe |
1.0 - 1.2 |
1. A method for production of a metal casting formed from a heat-treatable aluminum alloy,
comprising the steps of cooling the liquid aluminum alloy to no less than 400°C to
form a hot solidified metal casting, directly quench cooling said hot solidified metal
casting, and age hardening said quenched metal casting.
2. A method for production of aluminum alloy casting according to claim 1, wherein said
aluminum alloy is comprised in the 300 series of the AAA classification.
3. A method for production of aluminum alloy casting according to claim 1, wherein said
casting is promptly cooled after extracting into a range between 400°C and 470°C and
is maintained there for a time prior to quenching which is thereafter initiated from
a temperature within said range.
4. A method for production of a metal formed from a heat-treatment hardenable aluminum
alloy consisting essentially of the steps of cooling the liquid aluminum alloy to
no less than 400°C to form hot solidified metal, directly quench cooling said hot
metal, and age hardening said metal.
5. A method for production of a metal casting formed from a heat-treatable aluminum alloy,
comprising of the steps of cooling the liquid aluminum alloy to form a hot solidified
metal casting, directly quench cooling said hot solidified metal casting before the
temperature of the metal can drop below the point where solution heat treatment would
become required, and age hardening said quenched metal casting.
6. A method according to claim 5, comprising the further step of maintaining said hot
solid casting at a temperature no less than 400oC to maintain the alloying elements in solution and then thereafter directly quenching.
7. A method according to claim 6, wherein prior to quench the solidified casting is maintained
with a surface temperature of said casting in the range between 400oC and 490°C.
8. A method according to claim 5, wherein the extracting is at a temperature in the range
of about 490°C and 500°C.
9. A method according to claim 8, wherein said quenching is initiated immediately after
said extracting and is done with water to bring the casting down to a temperature
in the range between 65°C and 90°C.
10. A method according to claim 8, wherein said quenching is down to a temperature in
the range between 65°C and 95°C.
11. A method according to claim 9, wherein said quenching is down to a temperature of
about 85°C.
12. A method according to claim 5, further comprising forming the hot solidified metal
casting by filling a mold with liquid heat-treatable aluminum alloy, cooling sufficiently
to form the hot solidified casting, and extracting said hot casting from said mold.
13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the quenching step comprises a rapid cooling
of said hot casting at a rate sufficient to significantly inhibit progress of copper
precipitation and to maintain the copper in supersaturated solution within the aluminum
matrix.
14. A method according to claim 9, wherein said aging is in an aging furnace at a temperature
between 140°C and 250°C for a period of time from two to five hours.
15. A method according to claim 10, wherein the quench is initiated at a temperature above
350oC.
16. A method according to claim 10, wherein the quench is initiated at a temperature above
400oC.
17. A method according to claim 4, wherein said alloy contains Mg.
18. A method according to claim 1, wherein said aluminum alloy casting has properties
equivalent to a T6 temper.
19. Metal casting obtainable according to any one of the preceding claims.